Yom Kippur Tune


This beautiful tune, El Nora Alila, is sung at Congregation Etz Ahaim in Highland Park at nei’la time, the last prayer of Yom Kippur. My husband said the first tune on this video, the Turkish one, is the melody used at our synagogue, which makes sense since it was founded by immigrants from Salonika and Turkey.

Hat Tip: a friend who used to belong to Congregation Etz Ahaim and now lives in Israel; and another friend who was pleased to hear it sung at his father’s Reform temple in a suburb north of New York City.

Watery U.S. Memorial

Pacific at World War II memorial
The World War II memorial across from the Lincoln Memorial in Washinton, D.C. is a wonderful, watery display.

New Jersey
Each state is featured on a post, with the Atlantic Ocean on a large pillar with arch at one end and the Pacific on the other. I found New Jersey.

fountain squint
My middle son, my daughter and I all had to look away from the camera as the sun was strong that day in August.

water detail
For more watery posts, visit:
Watery Wednesday

Update: About the National WWII Memorial

Review with Lincoln Memorial

Lincoln Memorial in August 2010
Lincoln Memorial in August 2010

On My Blog

leek peas with potatoes salad - red onion, sage, no mayonnaise butterfly at Mount Vernon
West Side Story U.S. Holocaust Museum, Washington, D.C. thank heaven for little girls

Last year: Sephardi Piyut of Rosh Hashana
Remembering: September 11, 2008

Elsewhere in the Blogosphere

Symbols for Sweet New Year

Click on each thumbnail to find out more about the siman (symbol) of food that is eaten the first night of Rosh Hashana:
 carrot watercolor 
leek  apples
    dates in front of palm tree, watercolor on paper

Simanim for Rosh Hashana

Some people use the head of a lamb (that we be like the head and not as the tail). I now have a post on dates. And I may put out celery, for a raise in salary. Past post of simanim details here.

Here is a post from G6 of new fruit for the 2nd night of Rosh Hashana. I bought a sabra, a papaya, some fresh figs and a starfruit. The idea is you need a fruit that you haven’t eaten all year, so you can make the blessing called “shehiyanu.”

Did you get everything you need?

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